England completed a seven-wicket win over West Indies early on the fifth and final day of the second Test on Tuesday to take a 2-0 lead in the four-match series. Needing a further 28 runs for victory today, England lost Nasser Hussain for five to the second ball of the morning. However left-handers Mark Butcher and Graham Thorpe guided the visitors to their target of 99 for England to retain the Wisden Trophy they won at home four years ago.
Butcher hit the winning runs to finish on 46 not out while Thorpe, top scorer with 90 in the first innings, struck three boundaries for an unbeaten 13.
England need to avoid defeat in either of the final two Tests to seal a first series triumph in the Caribbean since 1968, having won the first Test in Jamaica by 10 wickets.
On the fourth day, fast bowler Simon Jones took five wickets as England moved to the brink of victory on Monday. West Indies had fought back strongly before the tourists, chasing a target of just 99, finished on 71 for two, 28 runs away from a 2-0 lead in the four-match series as they seek victory in the Caribbean for the first time since 1968.
It had looked as if West Indies might set a testing target thanks to a fine knock of 70 by wicketkeeper Ridley Jacobs, elevated above captain Brian Lara in the order. But after his departure and Lara’s dismissal for eight, the hosts collapsed to 209 all out, their last seven wickets falling for 51 runs.
Having taken the last four England wickets for four runs, including Graham Thorpe for 90, to bowl out the tourists for 319, West Indies made a sound start to their second innings as Chris Gayle and Devon Smith added 34 for the first wicket. Gayle, top-scorer in the first innings with 62, hit four boundaries and looked set for another useful score until Jones got one to keep low to bowl him for 16. Smith lost his head when on 17, lofting Jones straight to Matthew Hoggard at mid-off.
Things got worse for West Indies straight after lunch when umpire Billy Bowden adjudged Ramnaresh Sarwan lbw to Jones for 13 with the total on 56, though television replays suggested it was harsh. Jones may also be in trouble with the ICC for his exaggerated celebrations.
Lara’s decision to promote Jacobs up the order just 10 minutes before lunch was vindicated as he took the attack to England. Jacobs’s 14th Test fifty came up from 65 balls, including eight boundaries, as he and Shivnarine Chanderpaul, finally showing some form in the series, shared a century partnership.
But just as the home side looked to press on, Jones got a delivery to Jacobs to rise from short of a length and Andrew Flintoff took an easy catch running in from gully. That brought Lara to the crease but one lovely boundary off his legs was all the left-hander could muster on his own ground before he was trapped lbw by Steve Harmison.
Although England opener Marcus Trescothick’s wretched tour continued when he was bowled by Best for four in the first over captain Michael Vaughan and Butcher struck a flurry of boundaries. After hitting three fours and a six in a rapid 23 Vaughan was trapped lbw by Sanford and when bad light forced the players off early England had rattled up 71 runs in 10 overs to stand on the verge of another famous victory following their 10-wicket triumph in Jamaica last week. (Reuters)
BRIEF SCORES
West Indies:
208 and 209 (R Jacobs 70, S Chanderpaul 42; S Jones 5/57, A Flintoff 2/27, M Hoggard 2/48) vs England: 319 (G Thorpe 90, M Butcher 61, N Hussain 58, A Giles 37; P Collins 4/71, T Best 3/71, C Gayle 2/20) and 99-3